Teams of lawyers and medical professionals spend hours
editing documents and correcting inaccuracies to avoid financial and safety downfalls. And, for the most part, they’re successful. The links I posted above
are interesting for many reasons –mostly because they’re rare.

Medical instructions and legal documents, however, rarely
see the light of day, aka the public’s eye. They’re either tightly wound and
folded within a jar of Tylenol, or stuffed away in a law office.

But what happens when your favorite baseball team spells
it’s own name wrong on the most visible part of its identity, its jersey?
That’s exactly what happened in 2007, when the Washington Nationals, a Major
League Baseball team in the National League East, had two of its best players
sporting jerseys with the word “Natinals” etched across the chest.

There's still a bounty out on the missing "O"

One would think the Nationals, a team notorious for its poor
performance on the field, could have at least counted on the jersey
manufacturing company to cut it some slack and get the team’s name right. Only
in a perfect world.

The company, Majestic Athletic, issued a full apology. They admitted to not taking time to edit the mistake.

While the mistake probably didn’t send anyone to the
hospital (save for maybe the odd fan who might have experienced chest
pains at the sight) or cause any lawsuits, the lack of editing created further embarrassment
for a team known for nothing more. Some might say that’s worse.